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This work, the third panel of a triptych dedicated by the author to
the notion of illness derived from the patristic and hagiographic
texts of the Christian East from the first to the fourteenth
centuries, makes an essential contribution to the history of mental
illnesses and their therapies in a domain very little studied until
now. Confronted by the numerous problems still posed today in
understanding these illnesses, their treatment, and their
relationship to those who are sick, he shows the importance offered
for reflection and current practice by early Christian thought and
experience. After indicating how the Fathers understood the psyche
and its relationship with body and spirit, the author gives a
detailed analysis of the different causes they attribute to mental
illness and the various treatments recommended. At the same time he
shows how, relying on fundamental Christian values, they manifest a
constant solicitude and respect for the sick, and how they are at
pains to integrate them into community life and have them
participate in their own healing, foreshadowing in this way the
needs and aspirations of our own time. The last part discloses the
deep significance of one of the strangest and most fascinating
forms of asceticism the Christian East has known: 'folly for the
sake of Christ', a madness feigned with the goal of attaining a
high degree of humility, but also a way well-suited, through a
close experience of their condition, to help those who are often
among, today as in the past, the most destitute. Jean-Claude
Larchet is docteur des lettres et sciences humaines, docteur en
theologie, and docteur d'Etat en philosophie. The author of
Therapeutique des maladies spirituelles (Paris: Editions de
l'Ancre, 1991) and The Theology of Illness (Crestwood, New York: St
Vladimir's Seminary Press, 2002), he is a specialist in questions
of health, sickness, and healing. He is today one of the foremost
St Maximus the Confessor specialists.
Life after Death according to the Orthodox Tradition provides an
accessible and well organized synthesis of the ancient Christian
understanding of death and the afterlife. It draws primary from the
Greek language writings of the Fathers of the Church whilst also
bringing in the perspectives of Western Latin sources. Noting that
some divergences between eastern and western traditions have
existed since the fifth century, it argues that these have become
of much greater importance since the twelfth century as the Roman
Catholic Church developed the notion of Purgatory. This work will
be of benefit both to the Orthodox reader who wants to enhance
their own understanding of their Church's teaching, and to Roman
Catholics, Protestants and others who wish to become acquainted
with the fullness of Christian tradition on death and the
afterlife. They will encounter the abundant heritage of the faith
which was once for all delivered to the saints. (Jude 3)
Our Father who art in heaven. . . . Two thousand years have elapsed
since these words were first spoken from the Mount of the
Beatitudes. Since that time countless sermons and commentaries have
echoed these words, but never has the Lord's Prayer been likened to
such an array of spiritual themes: the Commandments, the Divine
Liturgy, the virtues, the Gospels, and then the Apocalypse and the
Psalms are all taken in turn and formed into "verbal icons." This
is an eminently practical book to be not so much quoted as lived, a
modern quest for the heart of Scripture.
Jean Hani, professor emeritus at the University of Amiens - where
he taught Greek civilization and literature - has long labored to
recover and illuminate various aspects of Christianity. His
findings have been presented in several works: Divine
Craftsmanship, Symbolism of the Christian Temple, and The Black
Virgin (all published by Sophia Perennis), as well as Apercus sur
la Messe, La Royaute, Du Pharaon au Roi Tres Chretien, and a
collection of articles entitled Mythes, Rites et Symboles. His aim
has been to integrate the latest findings in the history of
religions with the perennialist spiritual perspective of such
writers as Rene Guenon and Frithjof Schuon. If in the first place
our book is intended to be a personal homage to the Divine Liturgy,
it also has another purpose. Without any doubt, the gravest symptom
in the crisis the Western Church is currently undergoing - the
effects of which on art we have already denounced in our book The
Symbolism of the Christian Temple--is the calling in question of
the very meaning and content of the Mass, given that it is the
heart and vital center of the Church. And we have made our feeble
contribution to its defence. But our intention is not to become
involved in theological quarrels. In this study our point of view
is that of the historian of religions. What we wish to show is that
the Christian mass is illumined in the light of studies concerning
the universal schemas of the sacred to which it conforms. Most
assuredly, the Christian cult has its specificity, but that is for
the theologian and liturgist to spell out. What we are proposing to
do is to unravel the characteristics in the Christian cult linking
it to the universality of the sacred. From the Introduction
This work, the third panel of a triptych dedicated by the author to
the notion of illness derived from the patristic and hagiographic
texts of the Christian East from the first to the fourteenth
centuries, makes an essential contribution to the history of mental
illnesses and their therapies in a domain very little studied until
now. Confronted by the numerous problems still posed today in
understanding these illnesses, their treatment, and their
relationship to those who are sick, he shows the importance offered
for reflection and current practice by early Christian thought and
experience. After indicating how the Fathers understood the psyche
and its relationship with body and spirit, the author gives a
detailed analysis of the different causes they attribute to mental
illness and the various treatments recommended. At the same time he
shows how, relying on fundamental Christian values, they manifest a
constant solicitude and respect for the sick, and how they are at
pains to integrate them into community life and have them
participate in their own healing, foreshadowing in this way the
needs and aspirations of our own time. The last part discloses the
deep significance of one of the strangest and most fascinating
forms of asceticism the Christian East has known: 'folly for the
sake of Christ', a madness feigned with the goal of attaining a
high degree of humility, but also a way well-suited, through a
close experience of their condition, to help those who are often
among, today as in the past, the most destitute. Jean-Claude
Larchet is docteur des lettres et sciences humaines, docteur en
theologie, and docteur d'Etat en philosophie. The author of
Therapeutique des maladies spirituelles (Paris: Editions de
l'Ancre, 1991) and The Theology of Illness (Crestwood, New York: St
Vladimir's Seminary Press, 2002), he is a specialist in questions
of health, sickness, and healing. He is today one of the foremost
St Maximus the Confessor specialists.
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